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Saturday, April 13, 2013

10 Top Pre-Season Scouting Tips for Spring Gobblers!

by Steve Sorensen(Originally published in the Warren Times Observer, April 11, 2013.)

Scouting for spring gobblers definitely has lots of upsides.
Hunters who locate two or three dozen gobblers before opening day often score
early – and more than once. They enjoy witnessing the season breaking from
winter to early spring. They see more, hear more, and experience what hunters
who aren’t out there long before the season begins don’t.

But can hunters afford to be lazy, avoid scouting, and still
expect to score?

If candles had three ends, spring is the seasonwhen you'd be burning all three.

It’s probably not a question of being lazy, because the
truth is springtime is a busy time and most of us have many commitments. It’s
not always easy to get out there and do our proper pre-season scouting.

If candles had three ends, spring is the season when you’d
be burning all three. If your son or daughter is involved in youth baseball or
softball, practices and games make it all the harder to do any scouting. (Been
there, done that.) Then, you can’t avoid the annual yard and garage clean up,
and the honey-do list that’s been hanging fire all winter. Scouting for turkeys
can be like one more part-time job, and it will wear you out long before the
season opens and you can start toting your shotgun. If you could only send
those flaps on the side of your head to listen in the turkey woods at 5:00 AM,
so the rest of your body could take care of all your other responsibilities.

Finding time to scout is a challenge, so here are 10 tips
that might help you make the most of your pre-season scouting, while increasing
your odds once the season opens.

One of the best ways to do
your pre-season scouting is to lock up permission to access land early, in
prime places. It’s not as exhausting as racing around looking for gobbling
toms. It doesn’t burn a lot of gasoline or put a ton of miles on your
hunting buggy. And you can gather information from landowners about the
turkeys on the property, saving you lots of time. Plus, once you secure
permission, there’s a chance landowners might turn others down.

Opening day is very
competitive in Pennsylvania – and that can’t be good for making turkeys
feel at ease. So scout specifically for opening day. Find out where you
can go to get away from the crowds. I learned this back in 1989 when I
decided to hunt Cameron County on opening day. Why go so far? Because I
had hunted there in deer season, and virtually no one else was there. I
saw a nice gobbler that day, so I let him winter there and brought him (or
one of his rivals) home in the spring.

It’s a long season, and
you don’t want to wear yourself out, so pace yourself. Don’t let sleep
deprivation make you a zombie at work. Don’t let it make you as cranky as
the head witch in a broom factory, so you become a monster to your spouse.
It’s not worth it. Besides, there’s a law of diminishing returns to pre-season
scouting once the season opens. Understand that what you learn in the
pre-season begins losing value after opening day.

Keep a list of places
where you find turkeys year after year. Make a quick stop there just to be
sure the turkeys are still there. It doesn’t matter whether you hear a
gobbler or not, as long as you find scratchings, droppings, tracks or
feathers – clues that turkeys are there. Even if you find only the sign of
hens, if hens are there gobblers will be there, too. Once you’ve verified
turkeys are in your trusted spots – then go scout new places.

Many hunters consider
spring gobbler hunting a sport for a solo hunter, but when you hook up
with a buddy and compare scouting notes. That will let you know more about
what places are getting heavy pressure, give you higher odds of success, multiply
your options later in the season, give you both something to celebrate,
and a great memory to share. Just make sure your trusted friend will be as
discreet as you are about the gobblers you find.

Don’t ignore posted land,
even if you don’t have permission to hunt it. Just call them across a
property boundary. They don’t know the boundary is there, so that’s no
harder than calling them anywhere else. I’ve called gobblers off posted
land more than once, without ever setting foot on posted property. Respect
the poster signs. They tell you a boundary is there, but they don’t tell
the gobblers anything.

Lots of hunters scout by driving
the back roads, stopping at likely looking spots, and getting as many
turkeys to shock-gobble as possible. Make your list, and keep it in your
back pocket. With 40 or 50 gobblers located, you’ll always have a spot you
can head for, and it won’t take long to get to one. But remember this – when
you locate gobblers from the roads in heavily hunted areas, you’re hearing
the same gobblers a dozen or more other hunters are hearing. You almost
guarantee yourself competition.

Don’t limit yourself to
road scouting. Scouting on foot lets you go over the next hill and find
gobblers that other hunters will never hear. On-foot scouting takes more
time, so you won’t be able to cover as much ground. But the gobblers you
find will be less educated by the crowds, and give you higher odds for
success. Plus, you’ll notice many more clues about where turkeys are and
what they’re doing.

Don’t put all your eggs in
the pre-season scouting basket. You can waste time with a run of bad luck
when you’re unable to find any place that holds turkeys. And, turkeys will
often move. When hens head for good nesting cover, gobblers will follow,
so those places where you found all the gobbler sign can go cold as early
as a week into the season.

Maybe you want to be out there. Maybe you
think you should be out there.
But maybe you can’t be out there
because all those other wants
and shoulds and musts rank a little higher. Don’t
feel badly. Don’t feel that other hunters are out there getting the jump
on you. Even a small amount of scouting can pay big dividends, so if you
don’t have much time for scouting, use these tips to scout smart, and
enjoy the season.

Obviously, you need to hunt where turkeys are if you’re
going to be successful. That’s why some scouting is a must. So, do some
productive scouting. Know at least a few places where turkeys are hanging out. But
don’t over-do it. Too much scouting can turn your season into an intolerable
marathon. Turkey hunting is supposed to be fun.